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Citizen Girl por Emma McLaughlin
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Citizen Girl

por Emma McLaughlin

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Mostrando 1-5 de 15 (seguinte | mostrar todas)
I guess the main character is supposed to represent every woman (or at least every 20-something, college-educated, white woman living in urban America) so she doesn't even get a name in the book and is referred to only as 'Girl' throughout. Maybe her lack of name is why I didn't really care about her? Though I suspect she was not the kind of character I'd care about even if she did have a name. Ho-hum. ( )
  LBM007 | Oct 6, 2009 |
BLOODY AWFUL--the only reason it got a half star is because one of the two authors actually knows who Eddie Izzard is. ( )
  debavp | Apr 8, 2008 |
The author used a creative approach on relating the main character to her work life. The author didn't use her real name, she was known as G. I thought that this book was a real life example of how difficult it can be to get a successful job in todays society. The book was funny at times but overall it wasn't as enjoyable as I thought it would be. ( )
  RachelMilen | Apr 8, 2008 |
awful, i have no idea what this book was about. it went no where. ( )
  dkg | Mar 4, 2008 |
Synopsis: Working in a world where a college degree qualifies her to make photocopies and colorcoordinate file folders, twentyfouryearold Girl is struggling to keep up with the essential trinity of food, shelter, and student loans. So when she finally lands the job of her dreams she ignores her misgivings and concentrates on getting the job done...whatever that may be.

My review: I really loved Emma McLauglin's other novel The Nanny Diaries but this book was weird. The story was confusing and so were the characters. It was all too ambiguous for me. I did not find it funny in the least. ( )
  risadabomb | Feb 2, 2008 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0743266862, Paperback)

Citizen Girl is the sophomore effort from Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus, whose Nanny Diaries sent Park Avenue mothers running for cover and catapulted the duo to cult-like status amongst gossip literature's elite. This time around, our heroine is Girl, a twentysomething women's studies major whose liberal arts education led her to believe that saving women from worldwide oppression was as easy as reporting for duty at her local feminist non-profit. As Girl soon learns, no job is ever as it seems, and even the director of the Center for Equity in Community is not free from manipulating her staff in order to get ahead. As we follow Girl through unemployment and an eventual position as the Director of Rebranding Knowledge Acquisition for My Company, McLaughlin and Kraus invite readers on a raucous journey though the ups and downs of early 21st Century corporate life.

While at times disjointed and overly crass, Citizen Girl certainly has its moments. Most post-grad women will be able to identify with Girl on at least some level, whether it be returning to Career Services with her tail between her legs or forgiving her boyfriend for hiring a stripper at his best friend's bachelor party. ("I turn to find Buster slumped on my front stoop, soaked to the skin behind a proffered bouquet of hopeful white tulips.")

Some readers may tire of Girl's particular combination of naiveté and idealism after the first 50 pages, and the blatant stereotypes may wear thin after a while (Girl's boss at My Company is named Guy, and the woman they hire to turn things around is called Manley). Still, Girl's story is intriguing enough that by the end of the book, most of us will be rooting for her as she negotiates her way through the tumultuous battlefield that often is corporate America. --Gisele Toueg

(retirado da Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400)

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